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MGMT Promoter Methylation and Field Defect in Sporadic Colorectal Cancer
Lanlan Shen, Yutaka Kondo, Gary L. Rosner, Lianchun Xiao, Natalie Hernandez, Jill N. Vilaythong, Patrick Houlihan, Robert S. Krouse, Anil Prasad, Janine G. Einspahr, Julie A. Buckmeier, David S. Alberts, Stanley R. Hamilton, Jean‐Pierre J. Issa
JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute · 2005 · ▲ 496 citations
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sporadic colorectal cancers often arise from a region of cells characterized by a "field defect" that has not been well defined molecularly. DNA methylation has been proposed as a candidate mediator of this field defect. The DNA repair gene O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) is frequently methylated in colorectal cancer. We hypothesized that MGMT methylation could be one of the mediators of field cancerization in the colon mucosa. METHODS: We studied MGMT promoter methylation by three different bisulfite-based techniques in tumor, adjacent mucosa, and non-adjacent mucosa from 95 colorectal cancer patients and in colon mucosa from 33 subjects with no evidence of cancer. Statistical tests were two-sided. RESULTS: MGMT promoter methylation was present in 46% of the tumors. Patients whose cancer had MGMT promoter methylation also had substantial MGMT promoter methylation in apparently normal adjacent mucosa. This methylation was seen with a quantitative assay in 50% (22/44; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 34% to 65%) of normal samples with MGMT promoter methylation in the adjacent tumors, 6% (3/51; 95% CI = 1% to 16%) of samples without MGMT methylation in adjacent tumors, and 12% (4/33; 95% CI = 3% to 28%) of control samples (P < .001 for comparison between each of the latter two groups and the first group). MGMT methylation was detected with a more sensitive assay in 94%, 34%, and 27% of these samples, respectively (P < .001). In grossly normal colonic mucosa of colon cancer patients, methylation was detected 10 cm away from the tumor in 10 of 13 cases. Tumors with MGMT promoter methylation had a higher rate of G-to-A mutation in the KRAS oncogene than tumors without MGMT promoter methylation (10/42 versus 3/46, P = .03). Using a sensitive mutant allele-specific amplification assay for KRAS mutations, we also found KRAS mutations in 12% (3/25; 95% CI = 2.5% to 31%) of colorectal mucosas with detectable MGMT methylation and 3% (2/64; 95% CI = 0.4% to 11%) of colorectal mucosas without MGMT methylation (P = .13). CONCLUSION: Some colorectal cancers arise from a field defect defined by epigenetic inactivation of MGMT. Detection of this abnormality may ultimately be useful in risk assessment for colorectal cancer.
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APA
Shen, L., Kondo, Y., Rosner, G.L., Xiao, L., Hernandez, N., Vilaythong, J.N., Houlihan, P., Krouse, R.S., Prasad, A., Einspahr, J.G., Buckmeier, J.A., Alberts, D.S., Hamilton, S.R., & Issa, J.J. (2005). MGMT Promoter Methylation and Field Defect in Sporadic Colorectal Cancer. <em>JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute</em>. https://doi.org/10.1093/jnci/dji275
Vancouver
Shen L, Kondo Y, Rosner GL, Xiao L, Hernandez N, Vilaythong JN, et al. MGMT Promoter Methylation and Field Defect in Sporadic Colorectal Cancer. JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute. 2005. doi:10.1093/jnci/dji275.
BibTeX
@article{lanlan2005MGMTPr,
title = {MGMT Promoter Methylation and Field Defect in Sporadic Colorectal Cancer},
author = {Lanlan Shen and Yutaka Kondo and Gary L. Rosner and Lianchun Xiao and Natalie Hernandez and Jill N. Vilaythong and Patrick Houlihan and Robert S. Krouse and Anil Prasad and Janine G. Einspahr and Julie A. Buckmeier and David S. Alberts and Stanley R. Hamilton and Jean‐Pierre J. Issa},
journal = {JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute},
year = {2005},
doi = {10.1093/jnci/dji275},
}
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